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Está muy padre

It's really cool

ES
Example

Tu depa está muy padre, la neta.

When to use it

You see your friend's new apartment with a great view and you want to compliment it casually.

What it means

Literally "it's very father," which doesn't really make sense word-for-word in English.
In practice it means something is really cool, nice, or awesome.
It's friendly and positive, and it works for plans, places, gadgets, clothes-almost anything.
In Mexico it's super common; you can also hear "padrísimo" to intensify it.

Don't confuse it with

"Está muy padre" does not mean it's very expensive, it's very religious, you have dad issues. It specifically means "It's really cool".

Why Learn Real Mexican street Spanish?

🎯 Why Learn Mexican Spanish Slang

Mexican Spanish is dramatically different from the Spanish taught in textbooks or spoken in Spain. If you've studied Spanish for years but still feel lost watching Mexican films, confused in conversations with Mexican friends, or awkward when traveling in Mexico, it's because standard courses teach Castilian Spanish or formal Latin American Spanish — not the vibrant, expressive Mexican Spanish used in real life. Learning Mexican slang isn't just about understanding words; it's about accessing Mexican culture, humor, and social dynamics at a fundamental level.

👤 Who This Course Is For

This course is designed for intermediate Spanish learners (B1-B2 level) planning to visit, work, or live in Mexico, with Mexican friends, family, or partners who want to understand their conversations, fans of Mexican culture, music, and films who want authentic comprehension, and heritage speakers who understand formal Spanish but missed the street vocabulary. You should have a solid foundation in Spanish grammar and be comfortable with basic conversation, ready to dive into the informal, colorful, and sometimes surprising vocabulary that defines real Mexican Spanish.

📚 What You'll Learn

Master dozens of essential Mexican expressions used daily across the country. Learn the many uses of 'güey' (dude, buddy, idiot — context is everything), understand when 'no mames' is playful versus genuinely shocked, decode the multiple meanings of 'pedo' (problem, drunk, issue, fight), and discover expressions like 'chido', 'chingón', 'neta', 'fresa', 'chale', and many more. Each expression comes with detailed context about regional usage, formality levels, potential offensiveness, and the crucial cultural nuances that determine appropriate usage.

Explore the full course